Despite my dislike for Haunted Happenings, I have to admit that the range of offerings is much more diverse and engaging than a decade or so ago, as nonprofits in Salem have entered the fray in a big way. A good example: on this Friday, Peter Manseau, the Lilly Endowment Curator of American Religious History at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History, will be speaking about his new book, The Apparitionists: A Tale Of Phantoms, Fraud, Photography, And The Man Who Captured Lincoln’s Ghost at the Gothic Revival Chapel at Harmony Grove Cemetery. This setting seems perfect for this talk, which is co-sponsored by the Cemetery, the Salem Athenaeum, and the Salem Historical Society.
The Apparitionists is about spirit photography in general and America’s first “photographer of disembodied spirits” in particular: William H. Mumler, who set up shop in Boston in 1862 after producing a dual image by accidental double exposure. He offered up an embellished story to The Liberator in November of that year: alone in the photographic saloon of Mrs. Stuart, 258 Washington Street, trying some new chemicals, and amusing himself by a taking a picture of himself which, when produced, to his great astonishment and wonder, there was on the plate not alone a picture of himself, as he supposed, but also a picture of a young woman sitting in a chair that stood by his side. He said that, while standing for this picture, he felt a peculiar sensation and tremulous motion in his right arm, and afterwards felt very much exhausted. This was all he experienced that was unusual. While looking upon the strange phenomenon (the picture of two persons upon the plate instead of one) the thought and conviction flashed upon his mind, this is the picture of a spirit. And in it he recognized the likeness of his deceased cousins, which is also said to be correct by all those who knew her. At first, Mumler disavowed any connection to the Spiritualist community which seemed to give him more credibility, as his doctored cartes–de–visites of reunited husbands and wives and parents and children separated by death were much in demand. His claim was that his camera could capture these spirits, in medium-like fashion, yet he was not a medium himself. Mumler’s time in Boston came to a close when several of his “spirits” were recognized as real live Bostonians, but he moved on to New York, where his continued success drew the attention of investigators and detractors like showman P.T. Barnum, and where he was ultimately prosecuted for “obtaining money from the public by fraud, trick, and device” in a sensational trial held in the spring of 1869, the very same year that Mary Todd Lincoln visited his studio to secure a photograph of herself and her dearly-departed husband. Mumler was acquitted due to lack of evidence, but spirit photography lived on, in America and especially in England. That’s the story for me: the survival, the hope, even after the notorious trial and all sorts of revelations about the technical process that could produce multiple images on one print.
Harper’s Weekly, May 8, 1896; page from an album of spirit photographs by Frederick Hudson, 1872, Metropolitan Museum of Art; spirit stereoview from the collection of Oliver Wendell Holmes, 19th century, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
The context for that story has to be the wars–the great wars: the Civil War for America and the First World War for Britain. The collective mourning for the victims of these conflicts seemed unprecedented, unfathomable, and never ending–but of course it wasn’t. Just last week I was talking about all the crises of the fourteenth century with students in my Introduction to European History class: famine, war and plague, leaving millions dead, suddenly, languishing up there in Purgatory, without hope of salvation, unless some action was taken by the living. And suddenly the dead are everywhere: dancing, in the mirror, appearing in threes without warning at any time. Ghost stories emerged for the first time. Late medieval ghosts are often admonishing the living, to get their (spiritual) affairs in order or seize the day, whereas the spirits of the later nineteenth and early twentieth centuries seem to be conjured up for comfort only. In either case, medieval or modern, it’s more about the living than the dead. Given the long trend towards rationalism, it is difficult to understand how an essentially superstitious spiritualism would resurface in the nineteenth century, if viewed apart from the tremendous grief unleashed by the wars. All indications seem to point to the Spiritualism “conversion” of Arthur Conan Doyle, a physician as well as the creator of the ever-rational Sherlock Holmes, as occurring coincidentally with the Great War and the death of his son Kingsley: his earnest Case for Spirit Photography was first published in 1922, and was followed up by aspeaking tour across the United States which the New York Times labeled “The Second Coming of Sir Arthur”.
The Three Living and the Three Dead from the Crohin-LaFontaine Hours, c.1480—85, Master of the Dresden Prayer Book or workshop, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Ms. 23, fols. 146v–147; A girl with three spirits, c. 1901, Library of Congress; the first edition of Arthur Conan Doyle’s The Case for Spirit Photography, 1922.
October 17th, 2017 at 11:51 am
Another great post, Donna! I really like your point that the Civil War/Great War loss of life and impact on society was not unprecedented.
I appreciate the word on the new book by Manseau. Another good book is “The Strange Case of William Mumler, Spirit Photographer” – in the main it is a compilation of primary documents, but it is ably edited by Louis Kaplan, an expert in the history and theory of photography and new media – I blogged about it a few years ago here:
http://civilwarmed.blogspot.com/2009/04/ghostly-developments-mumlers-channel.html
The Spiritualism resurgence of the Great War, and Arthur Conan Doyle’s part, receives great treatment in the recent novel, “The Cottingley Secret,” which I enjoyed very much
A couple other rare and tantalizing Civil War spiritualist publications in my collection, for your enjoyment (I hope!), can be found here:
http://civilwarmed.blogspot.com/2011/03/thats-spirit-civil-war-ghosts-part-i.html
http://civilwarmed.blogspot.com/2011/03/thats-spirit-civil-war-ghosts-part-ii.html
Keep up the great work!
October 17th, 2017 at 12:32 pm
Thanks Jim, and I appreciate all these references and links—I was a little out of my depth here and could have gone on about late medieval ghosts…..
October 17th, 2017 at 1:00 pm
I wish you had! 🙂
Can you recommend anything in addition to “Medieval Ghost Stories: An Anthology of Miracles, Marvels and Prodigies
Medieval Ghost Stories: An Anthology of Miracles, Marvels and Prodigies” by by Andrew Joynes?
October 17th, 2017 at 1:37 pm
I love this book: http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/G/bo3619514.html
October 17th, 2017 at 1:54 pm
Thank so much!
October 22nd, 2017 at 4:33 pm
I think another force driving late 19th century spiritualism was Darwinian evolution and its bastard offshoot, social Darwinism. If the spirits could show us were were progressing spiritually, then one could support evolution while believing we had risen about its merely material forms. “The Ghost of Guir House” you might say is a spiritualist/theosophical counterpart to “Looking Backward.”